Disciplinary counseling

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A disciplinary counseling session is a meeting between a supervisor and employee. It may focus on a specific work place incident, or in undertaking a performance appraisal. A particular aspect of the employee's performance may have been identified by the supervisor as requiring attention, or the employee's overall performance or conduct may require adjustment. The counseling process may be initiated and executed by the supervisor and is not considered disciplinary. It is an opportunity for face-to-face communication between the supervisor and the employee, conducted in private, and is intended to have a constructive goal of providing feedback to the employee to correct the problem.[1]

Counseling is an important supervisory skill required as often as any other interaction facing the supervisor. In most cases counseling is a necessary step preceding disciplinary action. [2].

[edit] See also

[edit] External site

Employee and labor relation Stony Brook University [1]


[edit] References

  1. ^ Disciplinary Counseling in Higher Education: A Neglected Challenge. Stone, Gerald L.; Lucas, Julie Journal of Counseling and Development, v72 n3 p234-38 Jan-Feb 1994
  2. ^ McConnell CR Health Care Superv. 1997 Sep;16(1):77-86. Effective employee counseling for the first-line supervisor